1,810 research outputs found
Theory of dissipationless Nernst effects
We develop a theory of transverse thermoelectric (Peltier) conductivity,
\alpha_{xy}, in finite magnetic field -- this particular conductivity is often
the most important contribution to the Nernst thermopower. We demonstrate that
\alpha_{xy} of a free electron gas can be expressed purely and exactly as the
entropy per carrier irrespective of temperature (which agrees with seminal Hall
bar result of Girvin and Jonson). In two dimensions we prove the universality
of this result in the presence of disorder which allows explicit demonstration
of a number features of interest to experiments on graphene and other
two-dimensional materials. We also exploit this relationship in the low field
regime and to analyze the rich singularity structure in \alpha_{xy}(B, T) in
three dimensions; we discuss its possible experimental implications.Comment: 4.5 pages, 2 figure
Monte--Carlo Thermodynamic Bethe Ansatz
We introduce a Monte--Carlo simulation approach to thermodynamic Bethe ansatz
(TBA). We exemplify the method on one particle integrable models, which include
a free boson and a free fermions systems along with the scaling Lee--Yang model
(SLYM). It is confirmed that the central charges and energies are correct to a
very good precision, typically 0.1% or so. The advantage of the method is that
it enables the calculation of all the dimensions and even the particular
partition function.Comment: 22 pages. Added a footnote and realizations for the minimal models.
Fortran program, mont-s.f90, available from the source lin
A Meta-Algorithm for Creating Fast Algorithms for Counting ON Cells in Odd-Rule Cellular Automata
We develop a meta-algorithm that, given a polynomial (in one or more
variables), and a prime p, produces a fast (logarithmic time) algorithm that
takes a positive integer n and outputs the number of times each residue class
modulo p appears as a coefficient when the polynomial is raised to the power n
and the coefficients are read modulo p.Comment: 8 pages, accompanied by a Maple package, and numerous input and
output files that can be gotten from
http://www.math.rutgers.edu/~zeilberg/mamarim/mamarimhtml/CAcount.htm
XMM-Newton Spectroscopy of the Starburst Dominated Ultra Luminous Infrared Galaxy NGC 6240
We present new XMM-Newton observation of the Ultra Luminous Infrared Galaxy
(ULIRG) NGC 6240. We analyze the reflecting grating spectrometer (RGS) data,
and data from the other instruments, and find a starburst dominated 0.5-3 keV
spectrum with global properties resembling those observed in M82 but with a
much higher luminosity. We show that the starburst region can be divided into
an outer zone, beyond a radius of about 2.1 kpc, with a gas temperature of
about 10^7 K and a central region with temperatures in the range (2-6) x 10^7
K. The gas in the outer region emits most of the observed Oviii Lyman-alpha
line and the gas in the inner region the emission lines of higher ionization
ions, including a strong Fexxv line. We also identify a small inner part, very
close to the active nuclei, with typical Seyfert 2 properties including a large
amount of photoionized gas producing a strong Fe K-alpha 6.4 keV line. The
combined abundance, temperature and emission measure analysis indicates super
solar Ne/O, Mg/O, Si/O, S/O and possibly also Fe/O. The analysis suggests
densities in the range of (0.07-0.28) x epsilon^(-1/2) cm^(-3) and a total
thermal gas mass of about 4 x 10^8 x epsilon^(1/2) solar masses, where epsilon
is the volume filling factor. We used a simple model to argue that a massive
starburst with an age of about 2 x 10^7 years can explain most of the observed
properties of the source. NGC 6240 is perhaps the clearest case of an X-ray
bright luminous AGN, in a merger, whose soft X-ray spectrum is dominated by a
powerful starburst.Comment: 10 pages, 6 diagrams, accepted by ApJ, added a few minor change
Excessive noise as a test for many-body localization
Recent experimental reports suggested the existence of a finite-temperature insulator in the vicinity of the superconductor-insulator transition. The rapid decay of conductivity over a narrow temperature range was theoretically linked to both a finite-temperature transition to a many-body-localized state, and to a charge-Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless transition. Here we report of low-frequency noise measurements of such insulators to test for many-body localization. We observed a huge enhancement of the low-temperatures noise when exceeding a threshold voltage for nonlinear conductivity and discuss our results in light of the theoretical models
Appraisal, coping, emotion, and performance during elite fencing matches: a random coefficient regression model approach
International audienc
The twilight zone in the parametric evolution of eigenstates: beyond perturbation theory and semiclassics
Considering a quantized chaotic system, we analyze the evolution of its
eigenstates as a result of varying a control parameter. As the induced
perturbation becomes larger, there is a crossover from a perturbative to a
non-perturbative regime, which is reflected in the structural changes of the
local density of states. For the first time the {\em full} scenario is explored
for a physical system: an Aharonov-Bohm cylindrical billiard. As we vary the
magnetic flux, we discover an intermediate twilight regime where perturbative
and semiclassical features co-exist. This is in contrast with the {\em simple}
crossover from a Lorentzian to a semicircle line-shape which is found in
random-matrix models.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, improved versio
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